While preparations regionally vary, pork is typically the base meat used in most versions of the recipe. Pittsburgh-area city chicken is almost always breaded and usually baked, while in Binghamton, New York, the meat is marinated, battered and then deep fried. The Cleveland version is generally baked without breading and instead the meat is
dredged in flour, browned in a pan, then finished in the oven, and served with
gravy. Grocery stores sell city chicken in both the
Greater Cleveland area and the
Pittsburgh metropolitan area. In the Detroit metropolitan area, since the early 1900s, wooden skewers with chunks or wrapped pork, veal, and lamb has been specifically prepared as city chicken. In
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, at least one variation involves skewers of three kinds of meat: pork, veal, and beef. Another Canadian variation, from
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, was composed entirely of veal. In Cincinnati, the dish appeared on the 1933 lunch menu of upscale
La Normandie as baked city chicken "en brochette". In 1940, Crisco ran national ads featuring a recipe for city chicken, which gave the dish "some national traction", according to Keith Pandolfini writing in the
Cincinnati Enquirer. ==See also==